They would probably compete for some grass.
Mice, Rabbit and small animals.
Food would be the main area of competition between desert rabbits and mice. Depending on their shared environment, living space (places providing shelter from predators and for sleeping and breeding) might be another area of competition. For example: if food is plentiful, but safe and available living areas are not, they will compete for the latter, while if food is scarce but living space is plentiful, they'll compete for food. If both necessities are scarce, of course, they'll compete for both. If any or all necessities remain scarce, eventually one species will dominate and the other will migrate from, or die out of, that area.
No. Rabbits do not attract mice. But if their food is left outside, the food may attract mice.
A ocelot's favorite foods are mice, rats, rabbits, fish, lizards, frogs, birds, and snakes
Rabbits, Squirrels, Fish, Mice
Mice rabbits bugs
Two animals that compete with squirrels are rats and mice. They often live in the same areas and compete for food.
Yes, it might be called an enemy of the small animals it kills for food - insects, worms, birds, mice, rabbits, etc.
In the woodland habitat, the food web would consist of grass and seeds at the base, which are the primary producers. Rabbits and mice are primary consumers that feed on these plants. Foxes, as secondary consumers, prey on both rabbits and mice, while owls primarily feed on mice, representing a different predator level. Arrows in the food web would point from grass and seeds to rabbits and mice, and from rabbits and mice to both foxes and owls, illustrating the flow of energy and the feeding relationships.
Stabilizing selection
Food
no never because rabbits and mice are enemies